Tapestries
of the series “THE VALOIS COURT FESTIVITIES”
One of
the most precious and celebrated tapestry series of
the Uffizi Gallery collection depict major figures
in Catherine de Medici’s French court against scenes
of fetes, jousts and mock battles of the magnificent
entertainments hosted by Catherine from 1564 to 1573.
The series is composed of eight precious tapestries,
woven with wool, silk, gold and silver thread, datable
around 1575 from an unidentified Brussels’ manufacturer,
after designs by Antoine Caron (Beauvais 1521 ca. –
Paris 1599) from cartons by Lucas de Heere (Gent. 1534
– 1584). Most notable in all of the tapestries are
the particularly rich margins decorated with grotesques,
flowers, fruit and putti.
Catherine de’ Medici, Queen
of France, probably commissioned the tapestries for
political reasons to honor the family of her husband
King Henry II, and her granddaughter Christina of Lorraine
brought them to Florence in 1589 as dowry to his betrothed
Grand Duke Ferdinando I de’ Medici. The tapestries
value recorded in the Medici inventory of that year
amounts to 3,520 scudi, about one million US dollars
today.
After hanging almost uninterruptedly
for nearly one hundred years – initially in the Crocetta
Palace, ancient seat of the Tapestry Museum, and since
1966 along the first corridor of the Uffizi Gallery
– the eight tapestries were removed in 1987 owing to
the evident serious damages increased by the continuous
exposition to daylight, and have since been stored,
carefully rolled up and protected, in museum vaults
suitably equipped for their preservation. The tapestry
depicting The Bayonne Tournament was restored over
the years 1998 – 2008 thanks to State funds and substantial
contributions from Amici degli Uffizi.
The remaining
tapestries are all in need of conservative restoration
for the many different serious deterioration problems
ranging from tears, fraying and wear of the weft, to
the oxidation of the metallic yarn.
The restored tapestries
would be finally brought back to the public admiration
at the Uffizi Gallery after over twenty years’ absence,
in the new rooms with environmental conditions (light,
humidity, temperature) suitable to their proper conservation.
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